The Daily Action Book Club will hold monthly online meetings to discuss stories of political activism.

Members of the resistance now have a new way to connect with each other, get inspired, and expand their knowledge of political activism. Daily Action, a text-message-based service that gives subscribers one resistance task each day (and facilitates the process), launched the Daily Action Book Club, moderated by The New York Times Book Review columnist, Benjamin Moser.

Each month, the Daily Action Book Club will hold an online meeting via the Daily Action Facebook page and LitHub, moderated by Benjamin, during which members will get the chance to discuss the books with the authors, and talk about how the stories and lessons apply to what’s happening in our country and world right now.

The club will kick off its resistance-fueled reading with David France’s How to Survive a Plague. The book, which followed France’s Oscar-nominated documentary of the same name, tells the story of the LGBTQ activist movement to combat the spread of AIDS and pushed for the development of treatments to manage HIV, in spite of widespread shame, hatred, and apathy. “All Americans owe so much to the LGBTQ movement,” Daily Action founder, Laura Moser, said in a statement. “France reminds us of the challenges gay people faced in the age of AIDS, and how they overcame hatred and indifference to save lives. We urgently need to know their stories.”

France himself will join the book club discussion, which will take place on March 13 at 7PM EST. “It’s a great honor to be selected as the Daily Action Book Club’s first title, for me personally, of course, but even more so for the movement whose story I have chronicled,” he said in a statement. “AIDS activists have left a lasting and vibrant legacy indeed.”

Eager to participate? The book is available through many retail outlets, but one independent bookstore in particular, McNally Jackson will donate a portion of sales (from this book and all future book club titles) to Daily Action. Moving forward, Daily Action founders will consider member input to select monthly titles.

This club is just the latest in a major wave of resistance taking place across America. In the wake of Donald Trump taking office, there’s been an amazing level of civic engagement and interest in politics. And, as many Americans fight Trump and the Republican administrations’ actions like repealing the Affordable Care Act, eliminating environmental protections and greenlighting the Dakota Access Pipeline, revoking protections for transgender students, and cracking down on immigration; various organizations and people are providing services and tips for resisting effectively.

“It’s so easy to get discouraged at a time like this,” Daily Action founder Laura Moser said in the statement about the club. “We want to inspire people to remember how even small groups of activists have helped bend the arc of history toward justice.”